The first column and first row below are links to pages for
those houses and planets. Each house-row and planet-column
meet at a link to that planet in that house. "Mars2",
for example, is a link to Mars in the second house.
There is a similar table of links to each of the 10 planets in each
of the 12 signs here.

The author's model showing the astronomical
and geometrical bases of the astrological houses.

With ten planets and twelve houses
there are 120 total combinations of different planets in different
houses. The interpretation of every one of those 120 combinations is
on a link in the above table. With respect to the signs, the further
a planet is from the Sun, the longer it remains in a sign. The outer
planets Uranus, Neptune and Pluto for instance stay about seven, 14
and 21 years in a sign respectively. This is why the outer planets
are also called generational planets, because their effect by sign
affects entire generations similarly.

This is not true of the planets in the houses. Every planet stays about two hours per day in each of the
twelve houses. The scaffolding of the twelve houses is framed on the
local horizon and meridian planes, the thick, labeled, horizontal and
vertical planes in the model above. Because the Earth rotates once a
day on its axis, this framework makes a 360° rotation through the
sky every 24 hours, carrying the houses through the relatively
unmoving stars, signs and planets. And because every location on
Earth has it own specific and unique horizon, every location on
Earth has its own specific and different framework of houses
constructed on its horizon plane. This is why every one born at a
different location—even at the same moment in time—has a different
ascendant and different houses.

In the geocentric or Earth-centered model above, the Earth globe in the center—and the clear planes
perpendicular to the plane of this page that divide the sky into
twelve houses—do not move, while the celestial sphere with the
zodiac band, planets and stars on it rotates once every 24 hours.
This is the way it appears to us on Earth. In fact, from the more
correct heliocentric or Sun-centered perspective, the celestial
sphere does not move.
Rather the clear house planes rotate as a rigid unit around the
celestial sphere once every 24 hours due to the daily rotation of
the Earth on its axis.